F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Prepare your system for installing a Linux distribution.

Prepare your system for installing a Linux distribution.

Prepare your system for installing a Linux distribution.

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J0ebyron
Member
225
08-01-2016, 09:16 PM
#1
Hello everyone, many have mentioned Linux has improved since my last desktop try, so I decided to give it another shot. I mainly play games, so after checking with Nobara, he seems like a popular gaming-focused distro. He provided instructions for flashing the drive, and I reached the installation wizard. My main problem is with the disk—I have several drives on my PC but emptied one to use as the target. When I first pick it, partitions appear, but usually after installing Windows I just delete all partitions and rely on empty space. However, the next option stays hidden, and I’m unsure how to enable it. I attempted to create a new partition from that empty area, but it remains disabled. I don’t have any guidance for Nobara, and I’ve become a bit frustrated trying different settings. I’m hoping someone can help. My NVMe main drive (Windows) is GPT-formatted and offers more options—could this be the reason? But I didn’t want to mess things up further. Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
J
J0ebyron
08-01-2016, 09:16 PM #1

Hello everyone, many have mentioned Linux has improved since my last desktop try, so I decided to give it another shot. I mainly play games, so after checking with Nobara, he seems like a popular gaming-focused distro. He provided instructions for flashing the drive, and I reached the installation wizard. My main problem is with the disk—I have several drives on my PC but emptied one to use as the target. When I first pick it, partitions appear, but usually after installing Windows I just delete all partitions and rely on empty space. However, the next option stays hidden, and I’m unsure how to enable it. I attempted to create a new partition from that empty area, but it remains disabled. I don’t have any guidance for Nobara, and I’ve become a bit frustrated trying different settings. I’m hoping someone can help. My NVMe main drive (Windows) is GPT-formatted and offers more options—could this be the reason? But I didn’t want to mess things up further. Any advice would be greatly appreciated.

H
Huzaifa1
Member
50
08-01-2016, 09:56 PM
#2
The Erase Disk feature is available, have you attempted it? It looks like you chose manual partitioning but didn’t actually perform any manual splits.
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Huzaifa1
08-01-2016, 09:56 PM #2

The Erase Disk feature is available, have you attempted it? It looks like you chose manual partitioning but didn’t actually perform any manual splits.

C
CarmineSenpai
Member
176
08-09-2016, 10:34 PM
#3
Disk erasure appears only in the drive window location mentioned, not in the target drive where Linux installation is planned. As noted earlier, the latest image lists only "manual partitioning" as an available option for that specific drive.
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CarmineSenpai
08-09-2016, 10:34 PM #3

Disk erasure appears only in the drive window location mentioned, not in the target drive where Linux installation is planned. As noted earlier, the latest image lists only "manual partitioning" as an available option for that specific drive.

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JayJayw
Member
54
08-14-2016, 10:35 PM
#4
Turn off all except the drive you wish to install Nobara on. Then use automatic partitioning to set it up, and reconnect the remaining drives. Alternatively, search for guides on manually partitioning a Linux drive—many tutorials explain the steps clearly.
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JayJayw
08-14-2016, 10:35 PM #4

Turn off all except the drive you wish to install Nobara on. Then use automatic partitioning to set it up, and reconnect the remaining drives. Alternatively, search for guides on manually partitioning a Linux drive—many tutorials explain the steps clearly.

A
AdamTheYT
Member
65
08-15-2016, 02:34 AM
#5
Turning off all other disks might actually introduce automatic partitioning for the selected drive, which isn’t what the problem seems to be about.
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AdamTheYT
08-15-2016, 02:34 AM #5

Turning off all other disks might actually introduce automatic partitioning for the selected drive, which isn’t what the problem seems to be about.

K
kervinc
Posting Freak
804
08-15-2016, 06:12 AM
#6
Ah my bad, I couldn't quite tell the sequence of events. Check this document, it's not exactly what you are doing, but I think you need to click ON the partition graph (which I see how that's not obvious). https://nobaraproject.org/docs/live-inst...ame-drive/
K
kervinc
08-15-2016, 06:12 AM #6

Ah my bad, I couldn't quite tell the sequence of events. Check this document, it's not exactly what you are doing, but I think you need to click ON the partition graph (which I see how that's not obvious). https://nobaraproject.org/docs/live-inst...ame-drive/

R
RoarX
Junior Member
23
08-16-2016, 09:24 AM
#7
I haven’t come across the distribution you’re looking for before. As someone who’s used Linux for a long time, I usually pick the manual installation method. I tend to leave other drives unplugged because most distros can auto-detect and add them to the boot menu safely (as long as you don’t choose something confusing). Pick your drive, install the bootloader there too. Typically I just add two partitions—one for the bootloader and one for the main system. Swap usage is rare. The EFI partition is usually set to 512 MB, while the rest of the drive holds the remaining space.
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RoarX
08-16-2016, 09:24 AM #7

I haven’t come across the distribution you’re looking for before. As someone who’s used Linux for a long time, I usually pick the manual installation method. I tend to leave other drives unplugged because most distros can auto-detect and add them to the boot menu safely (as long as you don’t choose something confusing). Pick your drive, install the bootloader there too. Typically I just add two partitions—one for the bootloader and one for the main system. Swap usage is rare. The EFI partition is usually set to 512 MB, while the rest of the drive holds the remaining space.

W
W_O_L_F_R_A_M
Member
125
08-16-2016, 09:55 AM
#8
It could be useful to switch to a GPT format using Disks or KDE Partition Manager and check if Nobara identifies the drive correctly. This setup runs on Fedora with some quality enhancements and gaming-oriented tweaks. It should still work for Windows later, though you can force it to search if needed. I generally avoid disconnecting devices, but there were instances where secondary drives caused problems.
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W_O_L_F_R_A_M
08-16-2016, 09:55 AM #8

It could be useful to switch to a GPT format using Disks or KDE Partition Manager and check if Nobara identifies the drive correctly. This setup runs on Fedora with some quality enhancements and gaming-oriented tweaks. It should still work for Windows later, though you can force it to search if needed. I generally avoid disconnecting devices, but there were instances where secondary drives caused problems.

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Pierce70
Junior Member
4
08-16-2016, 01:47 PM
#9
I also came up with this concept and tested it—it functioned, not sure about the automatic partition choices for GPT versus MBR, but I don’t care. If it works, it’s good enough.
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Pierce70
08-16-2016, 01:47 PM #9

I also came up with this concept and tested it—it functioned, not sure about the automatic partition choices for GPT versus MBR, but I don’t care. If it works, it’s good enough.